In 2001, the hate-based attempted murders of two Mexican day laborers catapulted the town of Farmingville, New York into national headlines. Filmmakers Carlos Sandoval and Catherine Tambini spent a year there so they could capture first-hand the stories of residents, day laborers and activists on all sides of the debate, and Farmingville premiered on POV in 2004. After two recent hate-based crimes against Latinos in the New York area this fall, Carlos wrote in to share his fears for the future if Americans don't "hold back the hate."
"Beaner hopping" is what the seven restless teenagers called their Saturday night sport. They didn't do it very often, say once a week or so. They'd set out to "find a Mexican" who they would taunt, maybe punch in the face.
On November 11, 2008, the hopping turned into a stabbing. A man was killed.
The victim was Marcelo Lucero, an immigrant from Ecuador. The town was Patchogue, just south of Farmingville, New York. (Read an article from the New York Times about the incident.)
Less than a month later, three men screamed anti-Latino and anti-gay epithets as one pulverized Jose Sucuzhanany's head with a steel bat. Mr. Sucuzhanany, an immigrant from Ecuador, had been walking arm-in-arm with his brother in Brooklyn. He died without regaining consciousness. (Read an article about this incident from the New York Times.)
These lynchings hate-driven, murderous wildings, one next door to Farmingville, the other in my own New York City have sadly confirmed my reason for making Farmingville (POV 2004). They've also left me despairing of my hope for the impact of the film, and wondering about our future as a nation.
While Farmingville was received as a film about immigration, it was really about fear. I made it because I was afraid that the hate that had led to the beatings of two day laborers from Farmingville would spread like a malignancy, from "illegals" to Latinos. I was afraid that a new generation was about to become entrapped in the cycle of non-acceptance and condemned to the corrosive sense of low esteem that comes from being identified as the "other" just as I and generations of Latinos before me had been.
I hoped that a film that attempted to listen to all sides might become a bridge for dialogue. To be sure, Farmingville triggered lots of discussions. But now, eight years after Catherine Tambini and I started our small, quixotic crusade to hold back the hate, hate seems to be oozing from more and more places... and intensifying.
Fear has grown into a daily fact of life among Latinos. Some of us are telling our children to play inside to avoid trouble. Others are avoiding going out alone after dark. Yet others walk with cell phones at the ready. And with reason. According to FBI statistics, hate crimes against Latinos grew four years in a row from 2003 to 2007. Nearly one in 10 Latinos including citizens and legal immigrants has been stopped and asked about their citizenship status, according to one recent study.
As a result, I am again feeling as fearful as when I began Farmingville. However this time, it's not just for myself, or the Latino community for whom I fear. I fear for the welfare of the nation.
The Latino population is a demographic force. It's predicted that we will constitute nearly one-third of the country's population by the year 2050. We are rapidly becoming the young workers upon whom an aging population depends.
Put another way, the economic welfare of the country will soon rest on a population that we currently run the risk of alienating through fear, of isolating through intimidation, of limiting through unseen barriers that erode the sense of self, and the sense of polity.
Why should Latinos who are being intimidated out of the public square care to support those who make them feel unwelcome? How in the not-too-distant future can we ask them to underwrite our social welfare costs, let alone our bloated national debt, when they will remember that we let them be killed in the streets? And how, as journalist Jesse Trevino has so pointedly asked, will they even have the skills to help sustain America's economic preeminence when we have alienated them so much that they are dropping out of schools at record levels?
Let it be known that the violence we allow to be reaped today will come back to haunt us tomorrow. And if we're not careful, it will stalk our "beaner hopping" teenagers... and their children.
Farmingville is available for purchase from Docurama.
Carlos Sandoval's new documentary "A Class Apart" premiers on PBS's American Experience Monday, February 23, 2009.

Talk About This
I enjoyed this write up, but you are woefully remiss in not tackling the flip side of the coin...the racism prevalent in all of latin America and the negative attitudes they bring to this country as well. Why are you so silent about the "unprovoked" massacre of 4 college students in Newark and the current genocide in California?
by Willems at 8:03 AM on January 6, 2009
Living in fear? Come to Brooklyn! It's my Chinese, Jewish and Italian neighbors that are living in fear. Latin music blasting until 5 am, beer bottles on front steps every morning, Spanish graffitti on people's property, break-ins, slashed tires, students assaulted on the way to school, elderly people getting knocked down and robbed, girls being stalked, homeless threatening home-owners with arson. Why doesn't La Raza's lumpenproletariat "hold back the hate" themselves? But of course, being a victim means never having to take responsibility. And threatening ethnic cleansing won't generate much sympathy for your quixotic crusade.
by Jonathan Wong at 1:18 AM on January 8, 2009
Just saw the original documentary. It seems to present a holistic view from all sides, despite the obvious bias of the filmmakers. I side with the Farmingville residents wanting action taken against the illegal workers. It is NOT about immigrants, racism, color hate or thinking a "human being" is illegal. It is about illegal people working and not paying taxes and using public services without contributing and sending most of their pay out of the country. It is about a violation of health codes and disrupting what was once a peaceful and fairly safe neighborhood by having 25-30 people living in a house and congregating en masse and making a public nuisance and increasing crime rate. This is NOT just rhetoric. This is from personal experience.
What I saw from the other side is using the ineffectiveness of the INS and local constabulary, using emotional catch phrases, using the bleeding hearts' energy and presence (and I'm a democrat!) to support their cause and even waving an American flag (uh, it's not your country). They must be laughing at us every night as they drive to the bank or Western Union (Think about it--insisting on $10.00/hour or $100.00/day cash without taxes, etc. taken out adds up to alot of ca-ching!).
A woman in the outtakes said it succinctly. If there is a need for these workers, then make them legal. Document them and take out taxes, social security and workers comp, maybe even a health plan. She also expressed amazement that these people keep coming despite the expense and danger and doesn't either country care to address that.
It is unfortunate that both sides of the issue attract fringe elements that further radicalize and polarize and bring in more frustration and emotionalism. We need a solution and fast so we that can minimize violence to both sides and desist this atmosphere of fear and hurt for all.
Mike Speviak
by Mike speviak at 9:54 PM on March 3, 2009
This is an important issue. I am surprised at the lack of comments.
The film was well done in trying to present several sides of the issue. I believe that the intent of the makers of the film was not realized. It presented the worker's side with emotionalism, confusion of the issues, dubious legalities and a show of disrespect for the residents. The residents' POV was reinforced by this by having the ordinary US citizen identify with them. It is unfortunate that the powers that be, both state, local, and federal don't want to really tackle this problem. More information on why this is so is needed. Building a worker's hall won't work for several reasons: these day labourers will probably not go to an offsite--hanging out in the parking lots of hardware and nurserys is where the work is needed, employers will not want to pay extra ($15.00/hr--$5.00 to the agency and $10.00 to the worker) when they can pay less directly, and locals will rankle in using their tax dollars to fund this. Make them legal and deduct the same as other legal workers.
by Lou DeLucia at 10:41 PM on April 20, 2009
FYI: You can watch Farmingville in its entirety on the PBS Video Player. (through November 11, 2009)
by Theresa Riley at 1:23 PM on September 23, 2009
I think it was a good movie and both sides had good arguments. If people would just all get along it would fix all the problems.
by Taylor Mullaney at 6:19 PM on October 23, 2009
I think that the residents of Farmingville need to get over their ignorance and find a solution that can actually be used instead of just complaining and do something.
by cody at 6:20 PM on October 23, 2009
i dont really have a side but i think it would be better if they were leagel
by nichole gray at 6:21 PM on October 23, 2009
We are all one get it through your head.
by Zachary at 6:22 PM on October 23, 2009
I think that many people are way to negative about this. So what if they aren't legal why do you have to be just to live somewhere. I believe there shouldn't be legal or illegal immigrants they're people just like us and have families and lives just like us.
by Brittney.C at 6:23 PM on October 23, 2009
I believe that it was a good movie and that it gave good points to each side. It showed why people believe what they do and how you can have different sides to something.
by Jenny at 6:24 PM on October 23, 2009
Illegal immigration is wrong, but hey, there's not much we can do. If they're not here causing a rucus, then whatever. But you know, I'm not racist for thinking it's wrong. It is ILLEGAL for a reason. If anyone were to be driving drunk, they should get in trouble. A mexican shouldn't get in any more trouble than an american for driving drunk, but if they're illegal, and they interrupt, big problem with me. I can understand helping families, but I guarantee you that if you go down to Mexico illigally, they won't give a crap about you. Yep :)
by Ashley B at 6:25 PM on October 23, 2009
this documertry was a very interesting and both sides had some points that were very good but alot of the citizens of farmingvile just wanted them out. why cant Americans just learn Spanish y Engles so we can try to talk to one another.
by Sara at 6:25 PM on October 23, 2009
I believe that the immigrants should only be alowed to stay if there supporting familys
by Jake Coleman at 6:26 PM on October 23, 2009